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      • too eager to tell people what to do and having too high an opinion of your own importance: He's an officious little man and widely disliked in the company.
      dictionary.cambridge.org › dictionary › english
  1. In its early use, officious meant “eager to serve, help, or perform a duty,” but that meaning is now obsolete, and the word today typically describes a person who offers unwanted advice or help.

  2. People also ask

    • What Does Ex Officio Mean?
    • What Does Ex Officio Mean on A Board?
    • Ex Officio Members of The Board
    • What Are Some Examples of Ex Officio?
    • Does An Ex Officio Board Member Have to Be A Member of The Organization?
    • Does Ex Officio Mean Non-Voting?
    • The Ex Officio Role Always Follows The Position
    • Frequently Asked Questions

    The term ‘ex officio’ is a Latin phrase that translates as “from the office.” According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, ex officio means “as a result of one’s status or position” or “denoting or relating to a member of a body who holds the role as a result of their status or another position they hold.”

    To put the term ex officio into context for our purposes, ex officio on a board of directors means someone who automatically serves on a board by virtue of having some other position. Robert’s Rules explains the rulesfor how ex officio members serve on a board. For example, if an ex officio member loses the position that made them an ex officio mem...

    Ex officio members of the board have all the same rights, privileges, duties and obligationsas any other board member. They can participate in debates and vote on all matters. As with all other board members, ex officio board members must always act in the organization’s best interest. Ex officio members of the board are not necessarily elected or ...

    The most common example of an ex officio member is when an organization’s bylaws state that a board president serves as an ex officio member of all committees. In this case, the board president’s participation in those committees ties to the office of the board president as opposed to being appointed to a committee as other members were. The reason...

    An ex officio board member does not have to be a member of an organization, and often, they are not. For example, the Addiction Prevention Task Forcein Illinois must have four members from local public health departments and one member from the Department of Public Health on its board. The individuals who serve on this task force are considered ex ...

    As noted earlier, ex officio board members have all the rights and responsibilities of other board members. Can ex officio members vote? They can, and they generally do. Certain state laws mandate that anyone who is a board director and is counted as a member of the board must have the right to vote. California is an example of a state that mandate...

    Ex officio board members often bring targeted expertise to a nonprofit board. They are also valuable for taking information back to their positions that they learned during board meetings, which can be used for the benefit of the community. The rules for ex officio board members are fairly straightforward. The ex officio role always follows the pos...

    What is the ‘ex officio’ meaning in law?

    The definition of ex officio in law is much the same as with board directors. In law, it means someone who has a particular right because of an office they hold.

    Is ex officio the same as non-voting?

    No. Ex officio means holding a position by virtue of having a different position, and ex officio members have voting rights.

    What does it mean to serve ‘ex officio’?

    To serve ex officio means that you serve in a certain capacity because you received that right by holding another position (i.e., a board president is automatically a member of all board committees).

  3. Officious people deliver unsolicited advice, direction, and services regardless of what may or may not be appropriate, and especially without regard for the wishes of those on the receiving end of their “assistance.”

  4. If you describe someone as officious, you are critical of them because they are eager to tell people what to do when you think they should not.

  5. Of a person, an action, etc.: full of or characterized by (esp. religious) faith; believing; trusting. Cf. sense B.1.

  6. Officious is a tricky word as it seems like it might mean something like office or official. Instead, it is a word to describe someone that acts more official than they actually are. People who are officious are busybodies. They want to make their opinions known and followed, despite not having any kind of real power.

  7. OFFICIOUS meaning: 1. too eager to tell people what to do and having too high an opinion of your own importance: 2…. Learn more.

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